UQ’s Isabella Reynolds and Lewis Healy attended the prestigious AEC Global Teamwork course at Stanford University, designing an amazing four-storey timber building.
Liveris Academy scholars Amber Spurway, Flynn Pearman and Victoria Barnes talked to Contact Magazine about how they're adjusting to new ways of learning throughout the COVID-19 crisis.
If you’re currently working from home and trying to homeschool simultaneously, you may have uttered the phrase to your child/ren, colleagues or partner, “I can only do one thing at a time”.
Silvia Micheli and Paul Violett write for ArchitectureAU on how the rapid urbanization of China is opening up significant opportunities for Australian architectural practices.
This volume provides a significant snapshot of our understanding of Indigenous architectures throughout the world but especially here, where architects are increasingly expected to consider and acknowledge Indigenous Australia in sophisticated ways.
Knowledge of traditional hand-weaving techniques helped students from The University of Queensland to produce large-scale woven structures that will assist communities in transforming abandoned sites into vibrant informal urban greenspaces.
Are you a new student in Engineering, Information Technology, or Architecture? There’s so much happening across the campus during O-Week and beyond that it can be hard to know where you should be and when.
UQ's sculptor, Rhyl Hinwood is working with our UQ Innovate team to create modern, 3D-printed versions of her traditional sandstone carvings and bronze busts.
The UQ Architecture end-of-year graduate exhibition is the most important event in the School’s calendar, bringing together students, practitioners and academic staff.
Last year, New South Wales health minister Brad Hazzard proposed segregated Indigenous waiting areas in the emergency departments of the state’s public hospitals.
Speaking of Buildings: Oral History in Architectural Research reveals the radical potential of a research method that has historically been cast as subjective, partial and unreliable.
A public exhibition created with University of Queensland architecture researchers that showcased more than 60,000 photographs of suburban homes was awarded the highest honour at the National Trust Queensland Heritage Awards in October.
In 1950s Australia, places of worship were a pivotal component in the construction of culture and community in rural and suburban expansion. However, the subsequent significance of these buildings has been largely unrecognized. Philip Goad and UQ Architecture PhD candidate Lisa Marie Daunt introduce some of the country’s most intriguing experiments with a new, modernist language for ecclesiastical architecture.
A timber pavilion constructed by researchers from UQ using an innovative minimal-waste design was recognised at an international conference in Barcelona, Spain this month.